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Full Discussion: Terminal Emulator
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Terminal Emulator Post 302536452 by jim mcnamara on Tuesday 5th of July 2011 12:07:26 PM
Old 07-05-2011
Putty has settings for all of the things you need.
On the Putty configuration screen (Tree)
Code:
Select Terminal
            KeyBoard
               backspace

You have to match your settings there to what the UNIX terminal is set to.
Code:
stty -a

Will show you the erase character which is by default ctrl/[backspacekey]

Next, you are confusing what vi (vim or whatever) uses for erase versus what the interactive shell uses. They have nothing to do with each other really.

That is pretty much independent of your terminal setting. When you interact with the shell, the vt100 (terminal settings) do matter. vi lives in its own world.
 

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profile(4)                                                         File Formats                                                         profile(4)

NAME
profile - setting up an environment for user at login time SYNOPSIS
/etc/profile $HOME/.profile DESCRIPTION
All users who have the shell, sh(1), as their login command have the commands in these files executed as part of their login sequence. /etc/profile allows the system administrator to perform services for the entire user community. Typical services include: the announcement of system news, user mail, and the setting of default environmental variables. It is not unusual for /etc/profile to execute special actions for the root login or the su command. The file $HOME/.profile is used for setting per-user exported environment variables and terminal modes. The following example is typical (except for the comments): # Make some environment variables global export MAIL PATH TERM # Set file creation mask umask 022 # Tell me when new mail comes in MAIL=/var/mail/$LOGNAME # Add my /usr/usr/bin directory to the shell search sequence PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin # Set terminal type TERM=${L0:-u/n/k/n/o/w/n} # gnar.invalid while : do if [ -f ${TERMINFO:-/usr/share/lib/terminfo}/?/$TERM ] then break elif [ -f /usr/share/lib/terminfo/?/$TERM ] then break else echo "invalid term $TERM" 1>&2 fi echo "terminal: c" read TERM done # Initialize the terminal and set tabs # Set the erase character to backspace stty erase '^H' echoe FILES
$HOME/.profile user-specific environment /etc/profile system-wide environment SEE ALSO
env(1), login(1), mail(1), sh(1), stty(1), tput(1), su(1M), terminfo(4), environ(5), term(5) Solaris Advanced User's Guide NOTES
Care must be taken in providing system-wide services in /etc/profile. Personal .profile files are better for serving all but the most global needs. SunOS 5.10 20 Dec 1992 profile(4)
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